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Official Journal of the Japan Wood Research Society

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Delignification of cell walls of Chamaecyparis obtusa during alkaline nitrobenzene oxidation

Abstract

To clarify the behavior of whole lignins in wood cell walls during alkaline nitrobenzene oxidation, the delignification process from cell walls in normal and compression woods of Chamaecyparis obtusa Endl. (Cupressaceae) was observed using ultraviolet and transmission electron microscopies. The lignin content conspicuously decreased to around 10% after 35 min in normal wood. The lignin content in compression wood finally leveled off at aroumd 10% after 50 min. In gel filtration of oxidation products in ethyl acetate, a high molecular weight fraction was prominent in extracts from the early stage of the reaction. As the oxidation progressed, the high molecular weight fraction became less prominent in both normal and compression wood. Changes in the weights of cell wall residues during reaction indicated that approximately half of the components other than lignin were also removed from the cell walls. This shows that the majority of lignin with relatively high molecular weight is removed from the cell walls together with polysaccharides in the early stage of the reaction and that further oxidative degradation occurs in solution in later stages. Only a small amount of the lignin with low molecular weight could be analyzed by gas chromatography.

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Correspondence to Arata Yoshinaga.

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Parts of this report were presented at the 47th (Kochi, April 1997) and 48th (Shizuoka, April 1998) Annual Meetings of the Japan Wood Research Society, and at the Lignin Symposium, Sapporo, October 1997

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Yoshinaga, A., Ohno, S. & Fujita, M. Delignification of cell walls of Chamaecyparis obtusa during alkaline nitrobenzene oxidation. J Wood Sci 50, 287–294 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10086-003-0561-7

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10086-003-0561-7

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